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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1900-03-02, Page 3Recommended. By Rev. C. Tyler, a Methodist Noisier of Nova Scotia. Saves the Life of Mr. George W. Parks. A Gain in Flesh of Thirty two Pounds in Three Weeks. Amongst professional men who aro active and ardent advocates of Paine's Celery Compound, clergymen are found who never weary in recommending the 'svoucierfnl'remedy to Members of their churches who are ailing, sick ants dis- eased. The true and honest clergyman who has himself experienced the life-giving powers of Paine's Celery Compound— who has been raised from weakness of body to full health and vigor, feels it a duty to speak to others of the culy true health and strength builder that the world bas ever seen. Mr. G. W. Parks, once near the dark grave, but rescued and saved by Paine's Celery Compound after failures of his doctors, sends the following letter: "While at sea I was taken sick, which compelled ane to abandon my work and seek home and rest. I consulted the . doctorssvhopronounced it typhoid or slow fever. I suffered severely from night- sweats, and colts chills during the day. .Added to this I was extremely nervous, which weakened me and reduced my flesh until I was a mere skeleton. This continued until lust winter, when my wife and friends began to despair of any recovery, as the medicine I took produc- ed no good, and I was gradually growing worse. "Through the influence of the Rev. C. M. Tyler, I was induced to give Paine's Compound a trial, and I can y say it worked wonders. The first bol(10 gave me great relief, and five boles completely cured me. I gained thirty-two pollens in three weeks, and am now strong and healthy. I would u rge the suffering everywhere to give Pain's Celery Compound a trial." The number of licensed hotels in Guelph have been reduced from 10 to 14. It is understood that the Manitoba Legislature 'will be called for the dis- patch of business some day during the week beginning March 12. nts:--"War in South Africa." Two volumes. First contains com- plete history of couutry and war to date; tells about our contingents, giv- ing names of officers and men. Second volume to be published when war is over. Only Canadian manufactured book. Everybody cancels their order for American books when seeing ours. If a hustler, this is your gold. iniac. Prospectus free. - BRADLEY-GAREETSON 00., Limited, . Brantford, Agents:- People won't be deceived with American Histories of the war published now, as the war is only com- menced. Handle our two -volume Can- adian manufactured work.. First vol- ume ready soon, complete to date, thus you get commission. Second volume published when war is over. Why waste time with incomplete books ? Prospectus free. THE LINBCOTT PUBLISHING Company. Toronto. Agents:—Christian Endeavor, . Ep- worth League and B.Y.P.U. members, "Light of Life" is a treasure house of information. We need Christian men and women who desire to do good and make money to circulate this wonder - full book. • ' . BRADLEY-GARRET$ON 00 , Limited, Brantford. Agents :—Mr. Moody, the distinguish- ed Preacher of the century, is dead. EverY Christian wants a record of his wonderful life. Our book recom- mended by the .clergy. Demand un- precedented. Prospectus free. TILE L1N00TT PUBLISHING Company, Toronto. Agents :—We have the authentic life of the groat evengelist Moody. Large .book. liberally illustrated. Great sell- er. Prospectus free. ZHA.DLEY-GARRETSON 00., Limited, Brantford. "Canada for the Canadians." READ THE CANADIAN HOME JOURNAL A monthly magazine full of inter- esting reading matter and useful in- formation for CANADTAN 'W OMEN AND CANADIAN BOMBS Sebecriptiou price One Dollar tor Annum. OR you can receive it with this paper for one veer at the SAlno price by sending your orders to ! the publisher of the TIMES at . Wingbam. Send 10 cants for sample copy. You will like it. Address. Canadian Rome Journal Co., tum./r0) ioneitO, Ont To PATENT good sous may bo secured by our ales. A;idrest THE PATENT REOORII, Haiunsora, MII. t OUR TORONTO LETTER. (By our own Vorrt:spondrnt.) TIIi1 z:vls oI nr•.x'utswrm. Recognizing the filet that I might never again hue the opportunity of seeing my friend, Dave Lougliced, I set out for Stanley Barracks to have a last word and a last hauct-silalco, for to -mor- row morning our second contingent is off. The barracks is cn the bay just east of the exhibition grounds, a large arolled gateway with a sentry box on either side seems to tell yon to keep out. I ex- planted my mission and pawed on to the next soutry, who steed in the archway that loads to the inside of the fort. On all sides save nest the water aro the long stone barrack rooms, two story 11ieb, end Dare --bare, never a turret or stecl.le or flag. Well, yes! there was a flag, cue of' those old -- "It was only an old bit of bunting, It w us only an elcttattered rag." Yes, that's what it was—dirty, better- ed rag al.out the eizo of a pocket hand- korehief torn in two. In atkiug for tho London Company of which Dave is a member we • were directed to the second entrance, right- hand door at the top of the stair. Be- fore coming . within tlie. immediate vicinity of this, door we came to the conclusion that the London Company was a very noisy one. I started up the dirty, dirty stair. At the top an exciting melee was in pro - gross, so exciting that I deemed it ad- visable and infinitely safer to remain at the middle of the stair instead of ;pro - °ceding farther. I afterwards learned that, the Company lodged in the room to the left had attempted to enter the room cn the right. Hence the row. They did not get in, and when they re- tired discomfited, • I proceeded on any way, and was admitted to the room on the right. Rooms wo have seen. in endless pro- fussion, rooms in which bachelors lived —bachelors who would not wash them- selves or nutting e' -se; rooms in which married men lived whose wives know no virtue in soap, and knew not of virtue which lies next to godliness, but when I think of these rooms—rooms that I once thought dirty—and compare them with the room on the right, they, appear to be marvels of cleanliness and purity. The room on the right was dark complexion- ed, the bunks were lined on either side, heads to the wall, and down the centre was a long table on either side of which was a row of benches on which the boys sat as they ate the toothsome viands placed before thein.' • Their repast had evidently been com- pleted shortly before my arrival for the bread plates, cheese, and few (?) crumbs were still on the table. After considerable searching I found Dave. I was introduced to. a couple of the boys at the quiet ,end of the room. Dave told thein I had been a school teacher. "A schccl teach!" they exclaimed simultoneously, and their counteauces beamed with joy. "Egad," continued one, "you're the coon, a woman gave enc Shakespeare the other day, and you've got to take it. I've no room for it in my knapsack. Darn mo if I'd read it any way." Shakespeare was produced. "Here's Mrs. 'Brown er something," continued the other. I expostulated. It was of no avail. I am now the possessor of the dramas of Shakespeare, and the poems of•Elizabetla Barrett Browning. This transaction was no sooner com- pleted than the melee began again but it was soon stopped by our boys throw- i ing benches doorward. If a rebel head appeared bang, bang, wout the benches until they ceased to come, then our boys i bodan to stir things up among them- selves. Bread was the missile. By a strange coincidence the loaves had each and all been reduced to a very oonvon- ietit pitching size. The scene was like a basketball totunament. One fellow- _ and wo thought of Tom Brown—was polishing his shoes at the farther end of the. room, when a loaf which missed its intended mark struck him on tho head, .Ah many a shaft at random s 'r:t Finds marls the archer little m: ant. Strange to say the unfortunate person is still alive. On critically oxamming -.....-..-- • horses.' The blades of corn oven are too aiwdoc go itte rs THE MOAN TIES, MAWIR •?, Woo, the vinapoll we concluded the results would have been more disastrous had no eaten it. Farewells said, I sot out for town ac- companied by a paddy, who, like my- self, bed been up to say good bye, . This gentleman, so ho said, Matta served in Stanley Barracks for three yeses, and would ha''o been with one of the con- tingeuts now if lie could have gotten the wife off Ills hands. In the may days it would appear that the wino military discipline dill not ob- tain as it does now. One Sutherland captain and after- wards .sorgeaa:t was noted for never having sent a Mean to the guard room, commonly known. as the. holo. You may hear Paddy's enoloty of this Suth- erland as I dict, "Ho had such all airy way with him: Everybody liked him. I never knew him to seed a man to the hole wanst. Fcr instance if he taunt Hie to do a piece of work and Itnida't do it, ho wouldn't run cif and report, be just oome up and says, 'Gia that done er I'll kick yer back in,' and that rid be ell there'd be about it." Thou ft llowed along story,as to how Sutherland's ability chanced to be rec- ognized. Having joiner a new squad his drill excluded him from any con- siderable gymnasium exorcise. He landed in the "gym" one day, however, and was commanded to put on the gloves With ono of the best punchers in the battalion, With apparent reluctance he did so, Ile put the left glove on the right hand. This was rectified and he was told to defend himself. The cyder was too late; his opponent had loudest. The foe made three hits when Suther- land paralyzed. him by a blow on the short ribs. Sntheilaiid was melt of the walk thenceforth. My compnniou, who was an exception- ally large luau, told me that ho wES by an inch and a quarter the shortest in his division. One night they attended the opera at the Grand. • "A fine looking lot we wore in our full dress tunics. When the play was over we marched four deep up King and Young. Divil a policeman was in sight. ' If we'd a found one we'd a tore him limb from limb." I gave thanks for the escape of the un- lucky cop. He led the way through the old fort—the barracks of tk hundred years ago. It is used now for a residence for those soldiers who are harried. As we passed through my friend said: "Wan year I was corporal's orderly. Don't know what that means? Well, I hal to deal out the provisions among these very houses here, an' I'd sooner deal with a howl regiment av sojers as a half dozen av their wives. Wan auld divil lived in that house there, she'd storm if the meat was a half ounce under weight, er if everything wasn't just up to the handle. She wuz a riglar ould shrew." I Shall reserve the old fort for a future letter. Lours BL&1=n Durr. EVER RENEWING.. Wo are continually renewing and as- sorting .our stock of Perfumes, Atomizers, Tooth Washes and Powders, Brushes, Combs, Hand Mirrors, Manicure and Toilet Articles generally; all up-to-date goods at lowest possible prices. No need to say much about our con- tinued success in oto clispensing depart- ment, We aro accurate in our work, which always insures safety to our pat- rons and the public. Our sales of Paine's Colory Compound are increasing steadily. It is the popu- lar medicine; we snugly recommend it. . Oar best efforts are always put forth to make our establishment the "popular drug store." /y COLIN A. Ceien Hirt, Druggist, Wingham, Out. Bent Winter Feeds for Sheep. Sheep are not robust animals. On the contrary, they need every possible at- tention and conformity with their habits and constitution. This is most applic- able to thou feeding. They are natur- ally adapted as to their teeth and diges- tive organs, to short, fine food. To graze on short herbage ani to clip the tender shoots of brushes is their vocation. Hence the roughness of a farm is not desirable or even suitable for deem. It will not do to throw a bunch of stalks of corn to sheep, as it may do for cattle or a°ems Spin to b tjA Removes all poisons and impurities from the system. Gives strength and vitality in place of woaknesaJ and languor. The most 'wonderful 'teen purifier, restorative and strengthener known to science, Mr. Geo. Marriot, Baillicboro, Ont., says: "Two years ego I was very poorly in the spring, had no appetite, felt weal: and nervous, not able to week much and was ticocl all the tiine. "I saw Bardeen: 'flood Bitters- highly recommended, no got a bottle. "I staertc•ii.taldnf it, and insiati ot` tr;o 11101.10-,aIweeaswellsever1 was inn'ylife. "> .utcc)fnll r.•ti1;11.rend I3.li. I3. as a a cii-ti'd• 11 on:1 Ii;:ri :ot' a:. t'teeing nieai» elan01 rough fodder for them. The best pos- sible dry feeding of sheep is early cut, tender clover hay with the addition of sliced roots. This is the Lest possible dry, coarse feeding for the winter. Ewes man be kept in the best condition on this feed without grain. Tho ad- dition of some grain later, 'vlloll•t'ao lambs aro to be thought oP, will be necessary, but only a moderate need be given. Sheep are naturally herbivorous, and mischief is frequently done by over- crowding them with g*t'tfin 'when their digestive apparatus is suitable only for llolb.temus Tedder, --Sheep Breeder. Weak Lungs. Mr. Prank Jeentr,i;s, Coldwater, Ont., says: "1 naw troubl,�d for some time with sore throat nuns Weak Lungs, bet Dr. Woed's Norway Pine Syrup cur i a 111' when 'other refine iiea failed. Trico t:G cents. The oaten: fur the sal works o? W' ,c'ror for the :frisil year a •:Unte i to :),()13,7th) Ilona It'. "''i'h've it; no little olneinya Little ist)lrttrftiee in the bloo.t aro Ices of gteu f- clitltlter alt 1 el.. nod lye ext ' 'c1 by Itolet Seven a: i,ht. p r is for Spri The popular use of a spring medicine is founded on experience. With the coming of the spring season comes languor, debility, a "clraggecl- out'? condition and a general lassitude summed up in the familiar phrase--- " that tired feeling." fror_1 the gloss effects of the fatty foods of winter, thorc is no medicine equal to Dr. Ayer's Sarsaparilla. It not -only cleanses the blood, but re- vitalizes it. • It put:; a spring into the step and a sparkle into, the. eye that betoken health. It restores the lost appetite, induces refreshing; sleep, aad reduces the liabilityto disease by neutralizing the conditions essential to -the development cf disease germs. pays for A "As a sprint; rnccacine erring the months of Match, ADrll, and May, I know 02 no other preparation that can becin to compare with Ayer's Sarsaparilla. It is the leader of leaders." W. A. WEISER, M. D., liouibon, Ind. . "I cannot speak too highly in praise of Ayer's Sarsaparilla. From experience. I can recommend itas the best spring medicine." ISAAC S. SPARKS, l'atsey, Ky. "I have used Ayer's Sarsaparilla in my family f' r years and highly recommend it. As a spring medicine, it has no equal." A. 13. NIC'IOLS, Ellery St., Cambridge, Mass. "Ayer's Sarsaparilla has been a household companion in our family for years. r take it. • every spring, beginning in April. It tones up my system, gives me an excellent. appet ite, and makes nye sleep life a top. As a blood medicine, it has no superior in my opinion." II. 1.. WILDEY, Philadelphia, Pa. "Ayer's Sarsaparilla is without an equal as a blood purifier and spring medicine, and cannot have praise enough. I have watched its effects in chronic cases, where other treatment was of no avail, and have been astonished at the results. No other blood medicine that I have ever used, and I have tried them all, is so thorough in its action, and effects so many permanent cures as Ayer's Sarsaparilla." D.a. U. F. MERRILL, Augusta, Maine. W V Itching Piles. False modesty causes many people to endure in silence the greatest misery imaginable from itching piles. One ap- plication of Dr. A. W. Chase's Ointment will sooth and ease the itching, one box will completely cure the worst case of blind, itching, bleeding and protruding piles. You have no risk to ran for Dr. A. W. Chase's Ointment is guarautoed to cure piles. Alfalfa on 11Iuc1c Land. J. L., northwestern Indiana, asks whether alfalfa will thrive on muck land that overflows.; also whether it will grow in his climate. .Alfalfa is not a wet soil plant. It is indeed very doubt- ful whether it will do any good upon his overflowed muck land. If the common red clover will not thrive there, alfalfa will not. Alsike clover will thrive upon st:ch land. It Dost a little more per bushel of seed than common rod clover, but the seed being smaller not quite so much is required per acre. A bushel will do for eight acres if sown alone. Ycur muck land would be a royal place for rape. Your latitude is all right for alfalfa if you give it a porous subsoil with the. water level three feet er more below the surface. It cost a little Ilto:o per bushel than couln on red and. should bo sown ill anent the same amount on a well prcporecl seed bod in the spring and tho seen slightly covered. Some of the most successful growers sow no grain with it. J. E. Wing sows a bushel or less of -oats, then cuts oats for hay before ripe.—Ohio Fanner. Avow:ache Is engin a warnin:l that the liver 15 .;rind or inactive. More serious t:.:onbles may follow. T'or'n prompt, .:lent cure of Headache and all htr nzbies,. tete rs-e3r ` :c t k4 IirfOFiaiF7 Neidle they rouse the liver, restore i...l, regular action of the bowels, nano do not gripe or T,.tin do not h•:ltsteorInflame the internal organs, bat; hewn a pesitivo tomb s'ffeet. 25c. et all dreenists IV by mail of C. I. Heed & Co., Lowell, Mass. i5 Steeping Oats For horses. The nutritive power of oats, Her: Kalif, a German agricnittu'ist, says, may be considerably augmented by steeping the grain in water before giv- ing it to horses. This is his plan: He has three troughs each of which 'holds as much oats as will be required for one day's feeding. • The first day the first trough is filled with oats and water at a temperature of 8 degrees C poured over it, and the whole mass is well stirred. The water is left in the trough about six hours, after which it ie strain- ed off throngh a hole in. the bottom of the trough. Tho next day the operation is repeated in the second trough, and again on the following day the third trough. The oats thus steeped iu hot water get up fermentation and at the expiration of 48 hours are ready to be given to the horses and will then, as cording to Herr Raiff, pronece the may burn nuttitive effect. CANNOT TELL YOU ALL. Li a limited newspaper space, we can- not tell you all that you should know - about our ample and varied stock of drugs, medicines a11d toilet preparations ties for taccurate dispensing. nsnlm�,rrxuvetl Earth - OUR MOTTO: " Purest Drn s Best Goode and Lowo:+t Prices." Have goo. used Patne'a Celery Com-' hound? If not, wo advise you to give' it a trial if you are nervons, weak, run Clown or ailing in any 'iy. ay. Paine's -Celery Compound is the most reliable and eilicacioas Intelie•ine of the day. It makes sick temple will. A. L. HamILToti, Druggist, Wit:a12an1, Ont. Cocaine injet.tetl into the •'`:,'. brat Icavity (neatened the nerves rind midden Mrs. Mary Arndt, aged 83 to watch a Chicago eur'fietnl amputate Ler leg at the a hip without pain. taxa, Lever Pills nen ems- nether,. non -irritating anti purely vegetal1". Vial; aro the most eff'tt' tive vaned:: l,lt:n,• n its t't•natipation, i)Vvrpepsi t, i .. ... s out rick II. a3;..: r. i' ' t' .Ja tti•ile. . J. ,. ..•ii ±.>' .. . Tavern realKti are i175 in Walkerton, shop licenses $165, cigarette licenses $10. The council put the dog tax on the bar- gain counter this year, allowing 10 cents off for cash. T E HERS' TROUBLES. How Teachers May Prevent the Breakdown of the Nervous System which often Threateps. The worry and cork, ;the strain and anxiety of a teacher's life 5ite such as to tell severely on the nervous system. Time and again teachers have had :to give up good ' positions on account of run down health and shattered nerves. To each We con• intently recommend Milburres Heart and Nerve Pills, and in doing so we aro sup. ported' by the testimony of Mrs. Reilly. Colborno Street, Chatham, 00+ , ono osada tiro following steter ne"-•- "Milburn's Heart and Nerve fills aro, lioyond questien, the best remedy for nervousness and all exhausted conditions of the system I know of. My daughter, as n result of over study and nloa applie ltion to her (int:ne as echoes teacher, became ulnen run doyen tend dee bilitated bud was very tervotrt. Two months ago she brgan nein* ailbttrn's Heart and Nerve fills. Theyacgniokly and efioctn:ully in ben ease, • nee ug her 8t -on:t and building do 'her entire ',Intent." ll,ilbetrn's Ilca.t and Nerve fila netre Y';dpittttion, .T.Tt'rVnualets, teeenr tleee, Awn:tine I' cru da T:et1h10, , r LeSCtti t• Et=;rie,Debi, ity or any cas,....! nettseNike •f,.+;n I);•s,'rdcrc'd Nis Nuirv. o, Week 4, art Wat,:ry' i3_c;.1, Pries At. a Inn -